
Jerome Kerviel. Rogue Trader. As this case unfolds, more and more information is being revealed. He was the quiet guy with a not-so-impressive education background. Many of his peers may have been picked from the prestigious Grandes Ecoles, the Harvards and M.I.T.'s of France, and wielded advanced degrees in math or engineering. Kerviel came to work with a business school background and started work in the bank in the back office. Can we learn a valuable lesson from this case? As personal "professional" traders (as opposed to institutional trading), are we guilty of being rogue traders every once in a while? No compliance department to answer to. No regulator breathing down your back.
Kerviel's job was arbitrage: the art of exploiting tiny and momentary discrepancies in prices of very similar stockmarket instruments. To make money, the bank has to wager big volumes but the risk is usually small because each transaction is balanced with an equal and opposite one. The bank says he created fictitious accounts to make it look as though his bets that shares would rise had been covered. The bank was open to the risk prices would fall - they did. Kerviel was able to get away with it partly because SocGen's risk systems do not check up on unregulated over-the-counter contracts straight away if no deposit is required, the bank said. Furthermore, the bank primarily looks at the net exposure to market prices rather than the total outstanding amount wagered. Bank risk experts say this approach is not peculiar to SocGen. To keep the checks at bay and continue trading, the dealer falsified documents and misappropriated passwords, SocGen said.
Rogue Trader Trading Psychology
Most would-be traders operating from home are either self-taught or taught from education package bought from a trading education company. We are very much like the rogue trader: we don't have top class education, we have access to both the trading and the back office side of the business and we have the same psychological vulnerabilities. We are only human. It is easy to be seduced by money as much as Kerviel had been. It has been reported that he was attracted by the prospect of a 300,000 euro (US$503,778) performance bonus, but did not personally profit from any of the financial deals. He wanted that bonus. He may also wanted to keep up appearances with his peers.
Rogue trader psychology is one of delusion and illusions. The delusion of self in believing that taking on ridiculous levels of risk to "fix" a trade. Kerviel had taken a US$83 billion losing bet on European share prices. The illusions of a rogue trader include the belief that everything will go their way - the market will turn their way but when the time comes, the opportunity that they saw didn't come into fruition - the mirage in the distance.
Back Office Rogue Trader
The problem was, rogue traders have access or knowledge about back office operations. It was the case with Nick Leeson in 1995 and also the case for Jerome Kerviel in 2008. Rogue trader's can further their delusion by flexing the system to suit their reality. It was a total breakdown of the system.
Professional non-institutional traders don't have the luxury of a compliance system. No compliance department to answer to. No regulator breathing down your back. No limits. They have 100% control over their own risk, their own compliance.
Lessons of Rogue Trader Psychology
Professional non-institutional traders aka traders operating from home; have to institute their own control systems. They must operate with their own trading rules taking into consideration what level of risks they are able to make. They must also consider how they will mitigate their own risks by creating a money and risk management system including stop losses and a buffer. Be wary when you do start flexing your own rules regarding risk. You may turn yourself into a rogue trader.
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